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Construction cranes surround the future NFL Raiders football stadium Tuesday, June 4, 2019, in Las Vegas. The Las Vegas Bowl is moving to the new stadium next year, and will feature teams from the SEC or Big Ten conferences against a Pac-12 contender. (AP Photo/John Locher)(John Locher / AP)

The Big Ten and SEC will be heading to the Las Vegas Bowl in coming years, taking turns facing the Pac-12 when the game moves into a new billion-dollar NFL stadium in 2020.

The Big Ten, Southeastern Conference and Big 12 unveiled bowl lineups for the 2020-25 seasons Tuesday. The Big Ten has six-year agreements with 11 bowls, including new deals with Las Vegas and the Belk Bowl in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The Big Ten will alternate with the SEC in Las Vegas -- the expected new home of the Oakland Raiders -- and in Charlotte, with the Big Ten taking odd-numbered years in Las Vegas and even-numbered years in Charlotte.

The SEC also added a new agreement with the Gasparilla Bowl in Tampa, Florida.

"We are pleased to have an SEC bowl lineup that provides exciting destinations for our student-athletes and traveling fans," said SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey. "We enjoy great relationships with some of the best bowl games in college football and this lineup will continue to provide a wide array of rewarding bowl game experiences for our student-athletes and fans in celebration of a successful season."

The Big 12 is sticking with its current eight bowl partners through the 2025 season.

"The Conference's bowl lineup provides premier destinations and exciting matchups for our institutions and supporters," said Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby. "We are pleased to extend the relationship with our partners after the current term ends."

Here is the full list of bowls and agreements for the SEC and Big 12:

Big 12

-- Sugar Bowl (except for seasons the Sugar Bowl is part of the CFP semifinal rotation)

Scott Bell, Assistant Sports Editor. Scott is SportsDay's lead digital strategist. He also currently oversees coverage of the Morning News' college football, college basketball, Dallas Stars and golf coverage. He has been a part of the SportsDay team since 2010 and has previously led HS, Mavericks and soccer coverage. Prior to moving to Dallas, he worked at the Detroit Free Press.